I just saw a post on FB that said wishing people "Happy Holidays" instead of "Merry Christmas" isn't about being politically correct, it's about respect (because there are way more holidays than just Christmas).
Yeah...but...wait...that's what "politically correct" has always meant. It's always been about respect and sensitivity.
We're still playing this game?!
@sumpnlikefaith. The personal is political.
It's dangerous to assume that anyone else's politics aren't principled. We need to examine what the principles are to be sure that we're making robust decisions, minimising unintended consequences.
It's also crucial for us each to recognise that we're susceptible to social pressure to align with some ideas in our in-group which don't perfectly fit our principles.
#Politics are big and complicated by design, and intention. We can't afford to oversimplify this; we've seen where that takes us.
I've started to see expressions like: "This isn't political. It's principle." This is naïve.
There are various levels at play. I'll name 3:
-Personal
-Principle
-Political
Personal includes the things we feel because they affect us directly.
Principle are the things we feel because they interact with a bigger-picture need or conviction we share with those affected personally.
Politics is how we enact our principles in public, from speech all the way up to laws and consequences.
In the discipline of communication we've long recognised the more-or-less invisible power of the gatekeeper.
It is this recognition that gave rise to the pushback against the "elites" who are controlling elements in our lives.
However, a shift has happened. The gatekeepers are now digital algorithms which are fed intentions that serve corporate interests, not human/social ones.
Social media companies are increasingly anti-social. Too many folks have simply accepted this as the new normal.
@WeThePeople There's one major difference. Unlike Grok, Alfred isn't watching everything you say in order to train his LLM.
The situation is grave. There are huge challenges, but also some proposed solutions in this episode.
We need to process as societies what we're going to do about the personhood and legality of AI, and figure out market solutions too, perhaps even faster.
Thank you CoSo for being an example and a leader in this!
"...the politics of hate is the most effective way to get people to follow."
https://podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/harvard-professor-lawrence-lessig-on-why-ai-and/id1011668648
It turns out that anyone can say anything about God.
What God wants, What God doesn't want.
What God likes. What God doesn't like.
Who God likes. Who God doesn't like.
And God doesn't show up to endorse or refute any of it. None.
So then we're left to discern. 1st priority: what is said about God just to make the speaker's life easier? Especially, what gives them more power, and/or less accountability?
A lot of what is said on God's behalf is simply self-serving.
I watched Top Gun Maverick last night. It's an entertaining flick, which hits all the nostalgia notes, and all that.
But I'm just not sure that the repeated refrain "Don't think. Just do." is a motto the US military should be comfortable with.
If this is feeding and being fed by the popular opinion of a voting public, y'know, that's worth being concerned about.
I'm currently reading Brianna Wiest's 101 Essays That Will Change The Way You Think.
There is a lot of worthwhile information in here. I'm starting to think about how this works organisationally.
Like, one of her points is that we don't change because we value something (eg comfort) more than we desire change.
An organisation has a character/culture, and it works similarly -- an aggregate of the individual, esp in vague, aimless wanting: comparison, fear, comfort, stagnation.
This is my favourite song of the moment -- Easy by Laville:
It's remarkable to me how consistently conservatives' attempts to refute accusations of prejudice, antagonism and spite end up instead providing further evidence of their accuracy.
Is there an English word which describes someone becoming more like what they're being accused of, even in the denial of the accusation?
Stay curious and courageous. Change often arrives sideways.